The NHL Board of Governors voted unanimously Tuesday to approve Fenway Sports Group's sale of the Pittsburgh Penguins to Hoffmann Family of Companies for $1.7 billion, the second-largest transaction in league history behind the $2.2 billion Ottawa Senators sale seventeen months ago. The same session greenlit expansion exploration in Texas, where Houston and San Antonio remain the identified markets.
Fenway bought the franchise in November 2021 for $500 million from Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle, a leverage point baked into the distressed ownership structure at the time. The Hoffmann exit delivers FSG principal John Henry a 240 percent gross return in under three years, outpacing the 19 percent average NHL franchise appreciation over the same window. The Penguins posted $291 million in revenue for the 2023-24 season, third in the Metropolitan Division behind the Rangers and Capitals, with operating income near $68 million before debt service.
The Hoffmann fortune originates in Great Lakes transit infrastructure. Hoffmann Family of Companies operates the Mackinac Island ferry monopoly, a seasonal chokepoint that moves 1.1 million passengers annually between Michigan's Upper and Lower peninsulas at per-head economics unavailable to most transportation operators. The family entered hockey ownership in 2019 with the Florida Everblades, the ECHL affiliate structure FSG itself used as a de-risking model when it held the Penguins. The Everblades won three Kelly Cups in five seasons under Hoffmann stewardship, a development credential that smoothed the Board of Governors vote.
What matters here is not the Penguins—whose core of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, and Kris Letang has seven years of aggregate roster control remaining—but the Texas franchise vote occurring in the same room. Houston has not hosted an NHL team since the Aeros departed for Phoenix in 1996. San Antonio's Frost Bank Center seats 18,500 for hockey and sits twenty minutes from a metro population of 2.7 million. Commissioner Gary Bettman has spent four years positioning the league for a $1.2 billion expansion fee, a figure that requires either market to deliver $340 million in annual revenue within five seasons to justify the dilution mathematics facing existing owners. The Board's exploration vote is not a commitment, but it moves Texas ahead of Kansas City and Portland in the informal sequencing.
The Hoffmann family inherits a franchise with fourteen consecutive playoff appearances ending in 2023, a streak that masked erosion in the underlying talent base. Crosby's $8.7 million cap hit expires in 2025, the same summer Malkin and Letang's contracts roll off the books. General manager Kyle Dubas, imported from Toronto in 2023, has spent two trade deadlines selling futures for veteran補強, a strategy that delivered playoff exits in the first round both times. The Everblades model—develop, sell high, reload—does not port cleanly to a salary-capped league where amateur draft position matters more than ECHL farm systems.
Watch for Hoffmann's first capital allocation decision: whether to extend Crosby before July 2025 at something near $10 million annually or let the contract expire and begin the teardown Dubas has quietly prepared. Crosby's no-movement clause expires with the deal, opening trade scenarios Pittsburgh has not entertained since 2006. The Texas expansion timeline runs parallel; if the Board votes a franchise into Houston by December, the Penguins' rebuild either accelerates or gets delayed three years to protect the expansion draft math.
FSG exits with cash to rebalance. The group still holds the Red Sox, Liverpool, and a Pittsburgh real estate portfolio it acquired alongside the Penguins. The hockey asset always traded at a discount to those holdings; the Hoffmann bid closed that gap in thirty-three months.
The takeaway
Fenway exits Pittsburgh with **3.4x** return; Hoffmann family's ferry cash enters NHL as Texas expansion vote clears procedural threshold.
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